Thursday, August 30, 2018

Night Blooming Cactuses - Queens of the subtropical pollinator garden

Night blooming cactus

Not everyone lives in the colder north. Pollinator gardens are possible and needed in tropical and subtropical climes, due to the continued loss of habitat there. One of the most fascinating groups of plants and their pollinators is the night blooming cactuses of subtropical and tropical America.

This is a surprisingly large group, with many species (Wikipedia).  The one I grow is probably Epiphyllum oxypetalum which is a native of southern Mexico to South America. This is one of many cacti pollinated by bats and some sphinx moths. The amazing videographer Louie Schwarzberg shows this in his The Beauty of Pollination clip. Look for the mama bat carrying her child! And, near the end of the portion on bats, there's a bat coming by some months later and eating the delicious fruit of the cactus.

That's right, many of these cacti have large, good tasting fruit. One of the best known (find it in most Chinese or Vietnamese groceries) is the dragonfruit.


My night blooming cactus tempts me for many days before the event with the gradual growth of the bud, starting from a tiny pip on the edge of a leaf to a 3-6 inch bizarre object which finally begins to show white on the petals. Then I know that it will open the coming sunset. I try to invite friends and neighbors over for that evening to sip a glass and watch the process.

About half an hour after sunset the petals will begin to open, in a process that may take an hour or more. When the outer petals are forming alien-looking spikes at right angles to the main flower, it's fully open and then the fragrance begins to build.


At this point guests are often on hands and knees, looking into the amazing corolla and sniffing it:


You can see a nice time-lapse video of a potted plant blooming at YouTube

If you want to grow Epiphyllum oxypetalum as a house plant it's not hard. Give it a freely draining soil and bring it indoors well before frost. During winter, give it hardly any water and no fertilizer. Around March-April, long thin stems will begin to grow upwards, possibly reaching 10 feet in a really vigorous plant. You can pinch these to keep them in bounds. Short air roots grow from these stems, which the cactus uses in nature to anchor itself to the bark of tree trunks or to rocky slopes.

Once it is reliably mild outside, you should move your cactus outdoors. But, for the first week or two, make sure to keep it totally shaded - otherwise the leaves will burn. I cover my plant with a muslin-like cloth at first. In Toronto's latitude, after this hardening off the cactus can take full sun.

As soon as it is ready for sun, you can start giving your plant plenty of water with a low-nitrogen fertilizer, diluted to half strength. Once it gets hot, the skinny stems will begin to widen into flat green "leaves".  After leaves have matured for a month or two, you'll find small swellings on their edges that grow into flower buds.

the Wellesley College cactus night

Selby Gardens Cactus Evening
Around the world, those lucky enough to have night blooming cactus ready to pop have thrown parties that may go dawn to dusk.



In the New York Times, JoAnna Klein describes the cactus and some of the parties celebrating its bloom. She quotes from a 1937 newspaper clipping describing a cactus party at Blithewold Estate:

 “Bristol’s Cereus Puts on Show” shouts the headline. An eye-popping photograph shows the trailing leaders of  a huge plant with about 29 flowers in bloom. The caption explains they are only a portion of the 200 or so that opened on a night-blooming Cereus in a greenhouse on the estate of a certain William L. McKee. This from the Providence Sunday Journal, August 8, 1937.
The article notes an “enthralled audience” gathered to enjoy the spectacle. It is reported that at about 8 p.m. the “gorgeous white blossoms began to expand from their green pods.” This corresponds to the time when our Blanca begins to move, give or take 20 to 30 minutes. A certain W.H. Owen, superintendent of the property had been caring for the plant over the previous 12 years and had become thoroughly acquainted with its habits. “He said he expected it to blossom several nights ago but it didn’t probably because it was bearing more blooms than ever before.”
By 8:30 p.m., it is reported, “fully 150 blooms, six inches in diameter and containing a circle of creamy yellow stamens within were exposed to view.”
“The flower bears some resemblance to a huge white tulip and exudes a powerful, sweet fragrance, completely permeating the atmosphere of the hothouse.”  This particular specimen, Mr. Owen explained, had been developed from a cutting brought from Peru 30 years previous.   The plant had spread the entire breadth of the building, some 14 feet.
Eudora Welty

Eudora Welty was a celebrated Mississippi writer, who had a beautiful garden. In her book The Golden Apples she wrote that when her night-blooming cereus plant (“a naked, luminous, complicated flower,”) began hinting at exposing its fragile white buds each year, Welty would throw parties that would last from dusk until dawn in its honor.

If you are interested by this, you could try growing one or two (or 5 or 10, space permitting) of the gorgeous hybrid "Cereus" cacti, many of which can be grown in hanging pots. They have a range of flowers from crimsons to pale golds. I'll finish this off with a photo by "Lance", from his Hawaiian blog:





Sunday, August 19, 2018

"white" Agastache - a tremendous pollinator plant

Monarch on Agastache
The Agastaches of North America are native mint family members related to the Eurasian hyssops. That's why the common names usually are things like "Anise Hyssop" - a blue flowering perennial whose leaves add a liquorice scent to teas. But today's flower is misleadingly called Purple Giant Hyssop. The flowers are almost always such a pale blue that they look white. The Latin name is Agastache scrophularifolia, and it's native to much of eastern North America, zones 3-8.


This is a tremendous perennial for pollinators, in more ways than one. Flowers bloom over a long period in the second half of summer and into fall and attract a wide range of pollinators. The seeds are little nutlets which are intensely attractive to goldfinches, so in late summer I often see birds, bees and butterflies feeding at the same time. Tremendous in height, too - at 6 feet, this is a back of the border plant that needs full to half days sun, and soil that is not too dry. It's easy to grow from seed, blooming in the second year and onwards. 














The leaves don't have much flavor to me but can be used in teas. I love the candelabra shape of the branching stems. Unlike the true mints, Agastaches spread by seeds, not runners, so they won't take over your garden.

There are beautifully colored Agastaches in the U.S. southwest and Mexico, which are being selected to produced fine garden flowers. Unfortunately, I'm not aware of any of these golden, orange, coral, red, or deep purple varieties that are hardy in the northeast. If you've found some that survive our winters, please let us know! 

Purple Giant Hyssop has become endangered in many U.S. states, due to loss of habitat and competition from non native species. Consider putting some in your pollinator garden!

....Clement